I know also...Which is why I didn't have knee-jerk reaction to it. I remember you stopped posting before because you said that you had to get your "ego in check".

I struggle with ego when it comes to to women at times...It throws a monkey wrench into the gears of "spiritually awakening" because it kind of puts you back to that primitive base way of thinking..."me want pretty girl...me want a few pretty girls"...It's why intelligence agencies have numerous "honey trap" women to infiltrate targets.

I know also...Which is why I didn't have knee-jerk reaction to it. I remember you stopped posting before because you said that you had to get your "ego in check".

I struggle with ego when it comes to to women at times...It throws a monkey wrench into the gears of "spiritually awakening" because it kind of puts you back to that primitive base way of thinking..."me want pretty girl...me want a few pretty girls"...It's why intelligence agencies have numerous "honey trap" women to infiltrate targets.

but yeah...it's a tough thing to deal with...

Quoting: Rayrayz

Friggen ego

Quoting: Nice Boots Billy

What do you mean by that?

and who is directed at?

Quoting: Rayrayz

Myself

op knows

:)

Quoting: Nice Boots Billy

I know also...Which is why I didn't have knee-jerk reaction to it. I remember you stopped posting before because you said that you had to get your "ego in check".

I struggle with ego when it comes to to women at times...It throws a monkey wrench into the gears of "spiritually awakening" because it kind of puts you back to that primitive base way of thinking..."me want pretty girl...me want a few pretty girls"...It's why intelligence agencies have numerous "honey trap" women to infiltrate targets.

I believe Dion said today earlier about living in the 'now' and 'worry'.

Quoting: Seer777

If it sounds like paranoia to you then you know absolutely nothing about the subject that I was talking about.

Sorry, it's just a fact.

I wasn't talking about you...at all. Billy knows what I am talking about.

and it's not limited to just men...because I know you have some kind of fanatical/super aggressive need to defend women...at all costs...even when you are wrong.

[link to www.foreignpolicy.com] The trade name for this type of spying is the "honey trap." And it turns out that both men and women are equally adept at setting one -- and equally vulnerable to tumbling in. Spies use sex, intelligence, and the thrill of a secret life as bait. Cleverness, training, character, and patriotism are often no defense against a well-set honey trap. And as in normal life, no planning can take into account that a romance begun in deceit might actually turn into a genuine, passionate affair. In fact, when an East German honey trap was exposed in 1997, one of the women involved refused to believe she had been deceived, even when presented with the evidence. "No, that's not true," she insisted. "He really loved me."

Those who aim to perfect the art of the honey trap in the future, as well as those who seek to insulate themselves, would do well to learn from honey trap history. Of course, there are far too many stories -- too many dramas, too many rumpled bedsheets, rattled spouses, purloined letters, and ruined lives -- to do that history justice here. Yet one could begin with five famous stories and the lessons they offer for honey-trappers, and honey-trappees, everywhere.

Are "honey traps" real? [link to www.slate.com] Oh, they're real. Honey traps, also called "honey pots," have been a favorite spying tactic as long as sex and espionage have existed—in other words, forever. Perhaps the earliest honey trap on record was the betrayal of Samson by Delilah, who revealed Samson's weakness (his hair) to the Philistines in exchange for 1,100 pieces of silver, as described in the Book of Judges. The practice continued into the 20th century and became a staple of Cold War spy craft. Governments around the world set up honey traps to this day, but it's an especially common practice in Russia and China. The Central Intelligence Agency doesn't comment on whether its agents use their sexuality to obtain information, but current and former intelligence officials say it does happen occasionally.

I believe Dion said today earlier about living in the 'now' and 'worry'.

Quoting: Seer777

If it sounds like paranoia to you then you know absolutely nothing about the subject that I was talking about.

Sorry, it's just a fact.

I wasn't talking about you...at all. Billy knows what I am talking about.

and it's not limited to just men...because I know you have some kind of fanatical/super aggressive need to defend women...at all costs...even when you are wrong.

[link to www.foreignpolicy.com] The trade name for this type of spying is the "honey trap." And it turns out that both men and women are equally adept at setting one -- and equally vulnerable to tumbling in. Spies use sex, intelligence, and the thrill of a secret life as bait. Cleverness, training, character, and patriotism are often no defense against a well-set honey trap. And as in normal life, no planning can take into account that a romance begun in deceit might actually turn into a genuine, passionate affair. In fact, when an East German honey trap was exposed in 1997, one of the women involved refused to believe she had been deceived, even when presented with the evidence. "No, that's not true," she insisted. "He really loved me."

Those who aim to perfect the art of the honey trap in the future, as well as those who seek to insulate themselves, would do well to learn from honey trap history. Of course, there are far too many stories -- too many dramas, too many rumpled bedsheets, rattled spouses, purloined letters, and ruined lives -- to do that history justice here. Yet one could begin with five famous stories and the lessons they offer for honey-trappers, and honey-trappees, everywhere.

Quoting: Rayrayz

I didn't say it didn't exist.

Much 'exists' on this plane.

If one approaches an argument with paranoia of such, it will bleed through regardless if that is the intention of the sender or not.

We have all seen 'James Bond'.

Ugh...

Doesn't matter. You either see it or you don't.

I heard something earlier today which is resonating with me right now. I believe it was a story concerning the first grade teacher who locked her students in the bathroom to protect them from the mania which took place today.

It was said one of the children, in his frantic attempts to balance what was occurring continued to utter over and over,

"I just want to make it to Christmas..."

Or something similar.

I am so tired.

"Children waiting for the day they feel good...Happy Birthday, Happy Birthday..."

so the diamond has to fit, I was wondering how to drive, omg its so powerful, because I didn't even look feel into my head until last night..I have to fit mine into the right place..funny because my child pet name was Beebee :)

so the diamond has to fit, I was wondering how to drive, omg its so powerful, because I didn't even look feel into my head until last night..I have to fit mine into the right place..funny because my child pet name was Beebee :)

Massachusetts Institute of Technology]A device that emits an invisible beam affecting a person's ability to tell right from wrong might sound like the kind of weapon a comic book villain would use to wreak havoc around the world.

Scientists at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology say such a device allowed them to observe the effects magnetic rays have on a person's sense of morality.

In a new study, volunteers were subjected to magnetic pulses just above and behind of the right ear, focusing on the area of the brain believed to be the area controlling morality. The pulses were intended to block cell activity that contributed to the volunteers' sense of right and wrong.

MIT's researchers explain the study in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

"You think of morality as being a really high-level behavior," Dr. Liane Young, the study's lead researcher, told the British Broadcasting Corporation. "To be able to apply a magnetic field to a specific brain region and change people's moral judgments is really astonishing."

To see what effect a 500 millisecond magnetic pulse had, researchers gave the 20 volunteers a series of tests. In one test, the volunteers were given an ethical dilemma: should a man let his girlfriend walk across a bridge he knew wasn't safe?

The volunteers based their answers on how the scenario played out. If the girlfriend crossed with bridge safely, the man wasn't at fault. The volunteers based their decision on the outcome of the dilemma, not the moral principle, because of the magnetic pulse, the researchers wrote.

In another test, volunteers were exposed to 25 minutes of weak electric currents that prevent brain cells from functioning normally. They then had to read stories about morally questionable characters and judge whether the characters' actions caused harm. Researchers found that the volunteers accepted morally dubious actions that resulted in a "happy" ending.[/Quote}

now we are re orientated it seems this topic will be addressed commencing in our years 2013 to 2014 and it feels as i write that the tragedy experienced by our children of our technical societies, societies whom possess the most practical ability to respond, will feel the desire arising from the wave cause by yesterday to respond

but now comes Divine Will, no longer free will as in past times. No, now comes Divine Will!

Quoting: AC

sort of ac

what`s occurring is the electrostatic nature of humankinds environment is altering forcing their consciousnesses to alter shape naturally and experience normal but unusual environmental phenomena within the process...

...the combination of which will over time manifest a new...

.....to humankind...

.. understanding of what they are and where they exist...

...because of the global nature of the effect...

... common understanding will be global (all people)..

...thereafter pulsed communication will be of common harmonic value

..all will have shared/witnessed the same experiences and attributed common understanding ..